HomeMy WebLinkAboutZurich Herald, 1955-06-09, Page 3Seven years of thorough test-
ing, selection, and ae moderate
degree of inbreeding, have pro-
duced a new breed of bacon
hogs at the Canada Department
of Agriculture ExperimentalSta-
tion, Lacombe, Alta. It is a
white breed with flop ears,
which distinguish it from the
Yorkshire, and contains the
blood of the Landrace, Chester
White and Berkshire breeds, but
not of the Yorkshire.
a * *
Work on the new breed started
as a result of recommendation
by a committee appointed by the
Canada Department of Agricul-
ture in 1946, to study the swine
breeding situation in Canada
and the work of the Department
in relation to swine breeding
problems.
After investigating the work
then in progress in Canada and
visiting several leading swine
research stations in the United
States, the committee recom-
mended extension of research
and the improvement of the Ca-
nadian Yorkshire, and urged
• development of a white bacon
breed, with no Yorkshire blood
in its foundation, suitable for
crossbreeding with the York-
shire, The latter approach was
suggested as an effort towards
utilizing hybrid vigor which has
been demonstrated in many
crosses between breeds differing
in genetic background.
Animal Husbandry Division at
the Lacombe Station, who have
done most ofthe work on the
new breed as follows:-
* * *
It appears that the litter size
of the new breed, as measured
by number of pigs born alive
per litter, is about the same as
the Yorkshire.
The average birth weight of
pigs of the new breed. is about
one-half pound greater than for
Yorkshires.
Average weaning weight of
pigs of the new breed is some
five pounds greater than for
Yorkshires.
In rate of maturity the new
breed has a decided advantage.
Average carcass score is very
similar for the two breeds with
a slight advantage for the York-
shire.
The crossbreds of the two
breeds appear to be equal or
superior to either breed in all
important economic traits.
Pigs o f the new breed have
good temperament, and the sows
are good mothers.
* a. *
Additional co-operative tests
are in progress with , commer-
cial breeders by supplying them
with boars to which half of
their sows are bred, while their
remaining sows are bred to their
own boars. Results from these
tests are not yet available.
* * *
In 1947 the Lacombe Station
obtained ten high-quality Berk-
shire gilts from breeders in On-
tario. These were bred to two
Landrace-Chester White boars.
Offspring of these crosses
were backcrossed in 1949 and
1950 to three •other Landrace-
Chester White boars obtained
from the Central Experimental
Farm, Ottawa. In 1951 two pure
Landrace boars were obtained
from the United States Depart-
ment of Agriculture to provide
for the inclusion of more Land -
race breeding in the project.
e e *
The foundation of the new
breed therefore "Consisted of 10
Berkshire •• sows, 5 Landrace-
Chester boars, which carried be-
tween 47 and 71 per cent Danish
Landrace blood and. 2 pure
Landrace boars. All animals se-
lected were of good bacon type.
* *
Since 1952 the herd has been
closed and matings have been
made from selections based on_
litter, individual, and litter mate
performance. Tests following
standard Record of Performance
practices were conducted with
litter groups, of 4 pigs fed in a
piggery maintained at Lacombe
for the purpose. These tests pro-
vide records of feed used, rate
of gain and an appraisal and
scoring of carcass quality of
leanness based on measurement
and weight.
Through the development of
the breed it has been compared
under identical conditions with
a high quality strain of inbred
Yorkshires developed at La-
combe. In 1953 the comparative
testing of the Yorkshires and
the crossbreds' of the two breeds
was extended to the Experimen-
tal Station at Scott, Sask. In
1954 the test was extended
further by establishing a unit
of the new breed at the Experi-
mental Farm at Indian Head,
Sask. ' * *
From an analysis of the tests
made at all three stations, the
present evaluation ofthe breed
is summarized by J. G. Stothart
and . Dr. H. T. Freedeen of the
"BREAKS" MAKE FAMOUS MALE SINGERS
By !Wok Kleiner
NTA Staff Correspondent
It takes more than a voice to
be a..chaxtter --e a big -tithe male
singer. In fact, a,;.real'l' great
voice is something :. of a
cap. To reach the well -paying
pinnaele et crooning success
takes an adequate, distinctive
voice, a good press agent
nd
mostly, the breaks
Breaks like thee
Bob Hope happened,
der into a Greenwich•
Not So Dummy
If it weren't for the fact they
looked so much alike, you'd never
take Zeland Love to' be Leland
Love's brother, to say nothing of
his twin.
Leland is, a printer • who also
farms and invents for himself.
He is friendly and talkative. But
Zeland has never worked a day
in his life. He comes out only
after dark and is the strong silent
type. Just puffs on his pipe and
listens -but says nothing.
Aclose observer might think
Zeland was a dummy. And that's
exactly what he is.
But Zeland is no joke. He is
the latest of. Leland's inventions,
the result of lonely night driving
between his business and his
home.
Every time he had to stop at a
traffic light or a stop sign at some
dark, deserted spot; he thought
how easy it would be for a thug
to step out -of the shadows, point
a gun at him, rob him, and take
his car. And , then he'd seen wo-
men driving' around by them-
selves at night, and thought how
risky it was. So he made himself -.
a twin brother -its head made of
wood and tin - to serve as an
after -dark guardians
Zeland sits on the front seat
puffing away on a pipe that's
kept going by machinery in his
innards.
Once when Leland stopped at
a filling station, the attendant
didn't notice the fellow on the
front seat beside the driver was
a dummy. He got anite a shock
when Leland introduced him.
TWICE BLESSED
A young husband did not like
hash. His wife acquired a French
cookery book, giving many re-
cipes for using leftovers. The
next evening one of the fancy
mixtures in a covered dish ap-
peared on the table.
The husband reached over
and raised the cover, but the
wife said: "Why don't you ask
the blessing first, dear?"
Replied the husband: "I don't
believe there's anything here
that hasn't already been bless-
ed.'.
10 of an
-- historical
period
11. Strategy
ZL
12. Prophetess
17. Goocry
*y
20, Mane
_�
_„ --e•-*,,.-„ _ nickname
ACROSS 8 Less (mus.) 21. Outfit
I. Number 4. Unit of work 24 Assists
8. Plead cook* 2. Sun god 16. Trim
18 h1 8. Tropical 28 Unrtermine
rodent 10 .lntlerec
7. Departed animal
8 Symbol for 81. Rich
calcium 32. in general
o r+nnr favor
CROSSWORD
can
14 Eagle's nest
15 Explosive
noise
16. Away
18 Draw to a
rinse
10'Private[ndian
10 teacher
22 Sea god
18. Exist
24. strike
25: Tear
.7. "nntnags
point
35 1,1al* (preflxl
20. )2zit
81. Jewel
es
Rubber the
88
24. 2ixnlodrd
87. Color
88 Aloft
40, Firmament
42. Seaweed.
eed.
42..Ded
44, Haul
46 Troller
48. Drone
4 Dash
51, Corrado
52 robber
88 itintltled
511; Cornered
22 Logic Of hair
(,OWN
1. Rich mala
2. memos*
36 Piece out
86. Unit of fore*
37. Kind of
pigeon
38. Wrath
42. Thick soup
43 Accumulate
45. Plucky
47. Condiment
48. Millinery
66 13y birth
52. Danee step
54. Anctor of
Divinity teb,)
06. Symbol for
germanium
AaaliVat of sewhe"re on t tis page.
o. wan-
Village••
FRANK SINATRA: Fate smiled on
a singing headwaiter:.
night-club (and thus discovered
Tony Bennett).
A phone call from New York
to Canonsburg, Pa., came at just
the right time (and not three
hours later, by which time
Perry Como would have signed
a long-term lease on a barber
shop).
Harry James, . Benny Good-
mans. trumpet star, decided it
was time toform a new band
(and happened to see a young
singer named Frank Sinatra at
the same time).
Eddie Cantor needed a vaca-
tion (and picked a resort where
a kid named Eddie Fisher was
appearing) .
* * *.,
There are dozens of great
singers out of work, hundreds
clamoring for auditions, thou-
sands eking out a living singing
in roadhouses and cheap night-
clubs, How come Bennett,
Como, Sinatra, Fisher and the
handful of top stars made it and
these others didn't? They got
the breaks.
This is not to say the chan-
ters on top today aren't talented.
They have to be or the public
wouldn't accept them. But many
of the others are just as talented
maybe more so. They just
haven't been at the right place
at the right time,
Eddie Fisher gof his good
breaks, like most of the stars,
after a long string of bad ones.
Once, for example, he was sing-
ing on a radio station in his
home town, Philadelphia. He
got an audition 'with a barn-
storming band lest by Ray Be -
duke. He was great. Beduke
liked him. It was all set for
Fisher to join the aeand in a few
days.
Eddie sat by the phone, wait-
ing for the calx. The phone
didn't ring. It wasn't until weeks
later - sad, depressed weeks
that he learned the reason. The
band had broken upjust before
it reached Philly twain.
**
And then there was the time
he got a record contract. He
was only 18, andhe'd just fin-
ieshed a 13 -week stint at the
Copacabana as a production
singer. People heard him and
there he was where he'd always
dreamed of being -making a
record. It was just a small spot
on Columbia record with the
Marlin Sisters, but it was a re-
cord.
There was just one trouble -
one bad break. It was .during
the musicians' strike, and the
record just had a harmonica
background and it went no-
where.
But then, one day,. .out of the
clear blue Catskill sky, came
the good break. Eddie Cantor
carne to Grossinger's, a Catskill
Mountain resort, and heard Ed-
die sing. He took him with him
on a tour and helped him to his
RCA cotnract. And that break
paid off.
It was the same sort of good
break. for Tony Bennett, when
Bob Hope heard him singing in
a Greenwich Village night-club.
He was just singing one number
ber - the production number -
but .Hope liked him. And, like.
Cantor with Fisher, he was go-
ing on tour and needed a young
male singer.
* * *
Bennett's break led to another
one. On that Hope tour, Mitch
Miller of Columbia records
heard him and signed him to a
record contract. Miller just
"happened" to hear him.
Perry Como has had his goad •
said bad breaks, too. He wait
making a pretty good living -=-
for Canonsburg, Pa., anyhow -
at barbering. He had his own
shop and netted $125 a week.
And he sang at "` local affairs.
Then, more or less on a dare,
he auditioned for a spot with a
Cleveland • band. And he landed
it and decided to give singing a
fling. He could always go back
to cutting hair.
He sang with bands for nine
years, the last seven with Ted
Weems. When the Weems band
broke up, in '42, he decided he'd
had enough one-nighters and
long bus rides. Ile was going to
sign a lease on a new barber
shop -when a call came froxn
New York. They were offering
him a CBS radio show. He de-
bated a while, then took it (he
could always open up another
shop).
That was his break. From
then it's been onward and up-
ward. And now he's one of the
tops in the world. He can al-
ways open up the barber shop.
* *
Frank Sinatra is generally
recognized as the best chanter of
them all. But it took a great
big break for him to get wide-
spread public exposure without
which a singer is just another
unemployment check.
He'd been struggling for
years. He'd won amateur hour
contests, done countless radio
shows, sung in night-clubs. In
fact he was a $25 -a -week sing-
ing headwaiter at a New Jersey
club when the fates finally
smiled. This was in June, 1938,
and Harry James had decided
to leave Benny Goodman and
start his own band.
While he was thinking about
y +
,7
1 d
T11111115
Gorton Shift*. -
Cultivation of the garden, even
e Targe one, need not and should
not be a back breaking chore.
It is amazing how much easier
and quicker the job is done with
tools that have long handles. Of
course, for getting in close to
tiny flowers or vegetables, for
weeding and a few other deli -
pate jobs, it may be necessary to
get down on knees or knee pads
but with a little care a great
deal of the ordinary cultivating
and planting jobs can be hand-
led with a minimum of stoop-
ing. Spades, forks, dutch hoes,
spudders and many of the hand
cultivators can be purchased
with good long handles which
permit operation without any
personal bending at all Ali of
these, and other tools too, in-
cluding the fawn mower, should
be remembered will work easier
and faster if their cutting edges
are kept sharp and any moving
parts regularly oiled.
KEEP PLANTING
Too much emphasis cannot be
laid on spinning out the plant-
ing. It is much better to plant
a little every week for a month
or so than to try and get every-
thing in at `once. There is no
good reason why most vege-
tables and a lot of flowers can-
not be planted for many weeks
yet and this gradual planting
will produce far more satisfac-
tory results than "'sowing or set-
ting out all at once. The vege-
table garden particularly, should
'be planted gradually with only
a portion of the carrots, beets,
beans, corn, etc., sown at one
time.
In the flower line, experienced
gardeners will sow such things
as zinnias, . petunias, asters, cos-
mos , and other annuals in little
plots here and there in the flow-
er garden. When these come up
they will leave only a few plants
in the original position and
transplant the surplus to other
parts of the garden. Handled
carefully, these transplants will
come along almost as quickly
as those left untouched and thus
a large -garden can be planted at
trivial,. cost.
No $OO DEEP
A"l*ost everyone is inclined tut
plant far too. deeply. With tin;
seed such as that of lettuce, car-
rots, cosmos, zinnias, poppies,
and alyssum, which are not muck
larger than the head of a pin or
shingle nail, it is not necessary to
cover at all. We sow these in the
finest soil and merely press in.
Then, if possible we keep the
soil dampened until germination
starts. With larger seeds such es
nasturtiums, peas, beans and
corn, one should cover lightly,
say a quarter to half inch. With
bulbs or corms of gladiolus, dah-
lias, or potatoes, one plants four
to eight inches deep.
einsenessess
TONY BENNETT: First Hope, and
then record man Miller.
the big move he just "happen-
ed" to catch Sinatra's turn at
that nightclub. He signed him.
They toured the country, until
the James outfit ran into book-
ing trouble in Los Angeles. And
it "happened" that Tommy Dor-
sey's 'band was there, too, with
an opening for a singer.
James let Sinatra out of _his
contract. Frank went with Dar-
sey. And he made the records
that turned him, within a few
years, into the man who made
swooning a national pastime.
Things have to "happen" be-
fore a chanter becomes a star.
EDDIE FISHER AND FANS: Before the autograph stretch, a long stretch of waiting.
�l +ag-calling Pitcher
About fifteen years ago, there
showed up in the Brooklyn
Dodgers' spring training camp
at Clearwater, Florida, a large
right-hander by the name of
Pea Ridge Day. He said he was
named after the little hill town
of Pea Ridge, Arkansas, and he
claimed to be a great pitcher.
But be also claimed another
great distinction. He• boasted
that he was the champion hog -
caller of Arkansas and several
adjoining states. And, without
• any encouragement, he pro-
ceeded to give a demonstration
of his art on the spot. He emit-
ted a terrific and blood -curdling
hog -call. The guests dozing in
lobby chairs tumbled' to the
floor in terror, while others, in
their 'rooms, b e.s ie g e d the
switchboard with an x i o us
queries as to whether the fire
siren just heard indicated a
ae 11 n s dic
'
blaze in the neighborhood.
But Pea Ridge Day was a
pitcher aft
maneer Wilbert
after e g
p
Robinson's own heart. The jo-
vial Uncle Robbie was soft on
big pitchers particularly if their
heads weren't as strong as their
arms. And Pea Ridge ]lay stuck
with the team.
Pea Ridge
During ball games, Pc.a Rzd€,e
wassa sight to behold •az'ltl glisten
to, Every time he strLfc oii`t, a
man he would cup his stands and
give forth with one . of his' > ele-
brated hog -calls that would al-
most lift the scalps of the fans,.
Amusing as he was to his fel-
low -players, the end of Pea
Ridge Day was a tragic one.
One night, with his team mates
fast asleep on a train that was
taking them from Chicago to
Pittsburgh for an important
series, Pea Ridge suddenly, in
the dead of night, let loose with
one of his terrifying hog -calls
that awoke every man on the
train. No one could sleep the
rest of that night. Weary from
lack of sleep, the team lost the
game the next day. The players
blamed the loss on Pea Ridge
Day. They stopped laughing at
his antics and began to avoid
him. From an amusing clown
he' turned into an annoying
nuisance.
Pea Ridge Day was hurt by
the scorn of his team mates.
Something seemed to snap in-
side him. He turned morose and
sad and kept to himself. His
pitching ability fell off and
vanished. completely The
Dodgers let him out. And, not
long after, Pea Ridge Day com-
mitted suicide.
eel
• It was a sad end for a screw-
ball 'rookie who, had all the ear-
marks of becoming a great
pitcher. But the clown had had
his . dee-. When they stopped
laughing at him. his life was
no longer worth living. And so
he stepped off the stage -forever.
Who writes poetry imbibes
honesty from the poisoned lips
of lifer William Rose Benet.
SHORT SNORTS
Home pigeons have been
known to carry messages over
800 miles . . despite the fact
that they have been protected
from hunters for many years,
the quail in Ohio are at their
lowest population point in his-
tory .. , one pinch of snuff will
kill a fish or snake almost in-
stantly and will anesthetize a
turtle for several hours .
the humming bird makes upto
200 wing strokes per second,
while the wild .duck makes only
eight . . , male ants live but a
short rtime in adult state the
workers exist only a .few months •
-average life of a queen ant is
twelve months , .. the iridescent
color of a duck's wing patches is
not due to pigment, but of sub-
microscopic prisms breaking the
light on the surface of the
feathers.
DIRTY SKUNKS ON
INCREASE
A group of gangsters entered
a country tavern where several
fishermen were telling stories
"We
theirbeer.
and enjoying
want privacy!" the leader di-
vulged. iso drew a pistol and
fired twice. "All you dirty
skunks get out of here!" The
customers rushed out -ail ex-
cept a Texas cowboy who stood
calmly watching the scene.
"Well?" snapped the gangster,
waving his smoking gun.
"Shore were a lot of 'ern,
wasn't there, Podner?• the cows
boy drawled.
Upsidedown to t''revent Peeking
ssazi enaadal
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ati
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n
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alp
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�ilC1 as
f urrER LUCK NEXT TIME -Freckl-
ed Robert Maslin, 12, was die-
qualified whenenter
a rued.
to
1 e t
his bullfrog in the butter churn-
ing contest at the third annual
Butter Day Celebration. Robsrt
wanted to drop the frog into the
bucket of cream and let the
croaker churn it by kicking
around. Might have worked,,
too, but the judges( thought the
boy should do the churning
himself.
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AaaliVat of sewhe"re on t tis page.
o. wan-
Village••
FRANK SINATRA: Fate smiled on
a singing headwaiter:.
night-club (and thus discovered
Tony Bennett).
A phone call from New York
to Canonsburg, Pa., came at just
the right time (and not three
hours later, by which time
Perry Como would have signed
a long-term lease on a barber
shop).
Harry James, . Benny Good-
mans. trumpet star, decided it
was time toform a new band
(and happened to see a young
singer named Frank Sinatra at
the same time).
Eddie Cantor needed a vaca-
tion (and picked a resort where
a kid named Eddie Fisher was
appearing) .
* * *.,
There are dozens of great
singers out of work, hundreds
clamoring for auditions, thou-
sands eking out a living singing
in roadhouses and cheap night-
clubs, How come Bennett,
Como, Sinatra, Fisher and the
handful of top stars made it and
these others didn't? They got
the breaks.
This is not to say the chan-
ters on top today aren't talented.
They have to be or the public
wouldn't accept them. But many
of the others are just as talented
maybe more so. They just
haven't been at the right place
at the right time,
Eddie Fisher gof his good
breaks, like most of the stars,
after a long string of bad ones.
Once, for example, he was sing-
ing on a radio station in his
home town, Philadelphia. He
got an audition 'with a barn-
storming band lest by Ray Be -
duke. He was great. Beduke
liked him. It was all set for
Fisher to join the aeand in a few
days.
Eddie sat by the phone, wait-
ing for the calx. The phone
didn't ring. It wasn't until weeks
later - sad, depressed weeks
that he learned the reason. The
band had broken upjust before
it reached Philly twain.
**
And then there was the time
he got a record contract. He
was only 18, andhe'd just fin-
ieshed a 13 -week stint at the
Copacabana as a production
singer. People heard him and
there he was where he'd always
dreamed of being -making a
record. It was just a small spot
on Columbia record with the
Marlin Sisters, but it was a re-
cord.
There was just one trouble -
one bad break. It was .during
the musicians' strike, and the
record just had a harmonica
background and it went no-
where.
But then, one day,. .out of the
clear blue Catskill sky, came
the good break. Eddie Cantor
carne to Grossinger's, a Catskill
Mountain resort, and heard Ed-
die sing. He took him with him
on a tour and helped him to his
RCA cotnract. And that break
paid off.
It was the same sort of good
break. for Tony Bennett, when
Bob Hope heard him singing in
a Greenwich Village night-club.
He was just singing one number
ber - the production number -
but .Hope liked him. And, like.
Cantor with Fisher, he was go-
ing on tour and needed a young
male singer.
* * *
Bennett's break led to another
one. On that Hope tour, Mitch
Miller of Columbia records
heard him and signed him to a
record contract. Miller just
"happened" to hear him.
Perry Como has had his goad •
said bad breaks, too. He wait
making a pretty good living -=-
for Canonsburg, Pa., anyhow -
at barbering. He had his own
shop and netted $125 a week.
And he sang at "` local affairs.
Then, more or less on a dare,
he auditioned for a spot with a
Cleveland • band. And he landed
it and decided to give singing a
fling. He could always go back
to cutting hair.
He sang with bands for nine
years, the last seven with Ted
Weems. When the Weems band
broke up, in '42, he decided he'd
had enough one-nighters and
long bus rides. Ile was going to
sign a lease on a new barber
shop -when a call came froxn
New York. They were offering
him a CBS radio show. He de-
bated a while, then took it (he
could always open up another
shop).
That was his break. From
then it's been onward and up-
ward. And now he's one of the
tops in the world. He can al-
ways open up the barber shop.
* *
Frank Sinatra is generally
recognized as the best chanter of
them all. But it took a great
big break for him to get wide-
spread public exposure without
which a singer is just another
unemployment check.
He'd been struggling for
years. He'd won amateur hour
contests, done countless radio
shows, sung in night-clubs. In
fact he was a $25 -a -week sing-
ing headwaiter at a New Jersey
club when the fates finally
smiled. This was in June, 1938,
and Harry James had decided
to leave Benny Goodman and
start his own band.
While he was thinking about
y +
,7
1 d
T11111115
Gorton Shift*. -
Cultivation of the garden, even
e Targe one, need not and should
not be a back breaking chore.
It is amazing how much easier
and quicker the job is done with
tools that have long handles. Of
course, for getting in close to
tiny flowers or vegetables, for
weeding and a few other deli -
pate jobs, it may be necessary to
get down on knees or knee pads
but with a little care a great
deal of the ordinary cultivating
and planting jobs can be hand-
led with a minimum of stoop-
ing. Spades, forks, dutch hoes,
spudders and many of the hand
cultivators can be purchased
with good long handles which
permit operation without any
personal bending at all Ali of
these, and other tools too, in-
cluding the fawn mower, should
be remembered will work easier
and faster if their cutting edges
are kept sharp and any moving
parts regularly oiled.
KEEP PLANTING
Too much emphasis cannot be
laid on spinning out the plant-
ing. It is much better to plant
a little every week for a month
or so than to try and get every-
thing in at `once. There is no
good reason why most vege-
tables and a lot of flowers can-
not be planted for many weeks
yet and this gradual planting
will produce far more satisfac-
tory results than "'sowing or set-
ting out all at once. The vege-
table garden particularly, should
'be planted gradually with only
a portion of the carrots, beets,
beans, corn, etc., sown at one
time.
In the flower line, experienced
gardeners will sow such things
as zinnias, . petunias, asters, cos-
mos , and other annuals in little
plots here and there in the flow-
er garden. When these come up
they will leave only a few plants
in the original position and
transplant the surplus to other
parts of the garden. Handled
carefully, these transplants will
come along almost as quickly
as those left untouched and thus
a large -garden can be planted at
trivial,. cost.
No $OO DEEP
A"l*ost everyone is inclined tut
plant far too. deeply. With tin;
seed such as that of lettuce, car-
rots, cosmos, zinnias, poppies,
and alyssum, which are not muck
larger than the head of a pin or
shingle nail, it is not necessary to
cover at all. We sow these in the
finest soil and merely press in.
Then, if possible we keep the
soil dampened until germination
starts. With larger seeds such es
nasturtiums, peas, beans and
corn, one should cover lightly,
say a quarter to half inch. With
bulbs or corms of gladiolus, dah-
lias, or potatoes, one plants four
to eight inches deep.
einsenessess
TONY BENNETT: First Hope, and
then record man Miller.
the big move he just "happen-
ed" to catch Sinatra's turn at
that nightclub. He signed him.
They toured the country, until
the James outfit ran into book-
ing trouble in Los Angeles. And
it "happened" that Tommy Dor-
sey's 'band was there, too, with
an opening for a singer.
James let Sinatra out of _his
contract. Frank went with Dar-
sey. And he made the records
that turned him, within a few
years, into the man who made
swooning a national pastime.
Things have to "happen" be-
fore a chanter becomes a star.
EDDIE FISHER AND FANS: Before the autograph stretch, a long stretch of waiting.
�l +ag-calling Pitcher
About fifteen years ago, there
showed up in the Brooklyn
Dodgers' spring training camp
at Clearwater, Florida, a large
right-hander by the name of
Pea Ridge Day. He said he was
named after the little hill town
of Pea Ridge, Arkansas, and he
claimed to be a great pitcher.
But be also claimed another
great distinction. He• boasted
that he was the champion hog -
caller of Arkansas and several
adjoining states. And, without
• any encouragement, he pro-
ceeded to give a demonstration
of his art on the spot. He emit-
ted a terrific and blood -curdling
hog -call. The guests dozing in
lobby chairs tumbled' to the
floor in terror, while others, in
their 'rooms, b e.s ie g e d the
switchboard with an x i o us
queries as to whether the fire
siren just heard indicated a
ae 11 n s dic
'
blaze in the neighborhood.
But Pea Ridge Day was a
pitcher aft
maneer Wilbert
after e g
p
Robinson's own heart. The jo-
vial Uncle Robbie was soft on
big pitchers particularly if their
heads weren't as strong as their
arms. And Pea Ridge ]lay stuck
with the team.
Pea Ridge
During ball games, Pc.a Rzd€,e
wassa sight to behold •az'ltl glisten
to, Every time he strLfc oii`t, a
man he would cup his stands and
give forth with one . of his' > ele-
brated hog -calls that would al-
most lift the scalps of the fans,.
Amusing as he was to his fel-
low -players, the end of Pea
Ridge Day was a tragic one.
One night, with his team mates
fast asleep on a train that was
taking them from Chicago to
Pittsburgh for an important
series, Pea Ridge suddenly, in
the dead of night, let loose with
one of his terrifying hog -calls
that awoke every man on the
train. No one could sleep the
rest of that night. Weary from
lack of sleep, the team lost the
game the next day. The players
blamed the loss on Pea Ridge
Day. They stopped laughing at
his antics and began to avoid
him. From an amusing clown
he' turned into an annoying
nuisance.
Pea Ridge Day was hurt by
the scorn of his team mates.
Something seemed to snap in-
side him. He turned morose and
sad and kept to himself. His
pitching ability fell off and
vanished. completely The
Dodgers let him out. And, not
long after, Pea Ridge Day com-
mitted suicide.
eel
• It was a sad end for a screw-
ball 'rookie who, had all the ear-
marks of becoming a great
pitcher. But the clown had had
his . dee-. When they stopped
laughing at him. his life was
no longer worth living. And so
he stepped off the stage -forever.
Who writes poetry imbibes
honesty from the poisoned lips
of lifer William Rose Benet.
SHORT SNORTS
Home pigeons have been
known to carry messages over
800 miles . . despite the fact
that they have been protected
from hunters for many years,
the quail in Ohio are at their
lowest population point in his-
tory .. , one pinch of snuff will
kill a fish or snake almost in-
stantly and will anesthetize a
turtle for several hours .
the humming bird makes upto
200 wing strokes per second,
while the wild .duck makes only
eight . . , male ants live but a
short rtime in adult state the
workers exist only a .few months •
-average life of a queen ant is
twelve months , .. the iridescent
color of a duck's wing patches is
not due to pigment, but of sub-
microscopic prisms breaking the
light on the surface of the
feathers.
DIRTY SKUNKS ON
INCREASE
A group of gangsters entered
a country tavern where several
fishermen were telling stories
"We
theirbeer.
and enjoying
want privacy!" the leader di-
vulged. iso drew a pistol and
fired twice. "All you dirty
skunks get out of here!" The
customers rushed out -ail ex-
cept a Texas cowboy who stood
calmly watching the scene.
"Well?" snapped the gangster,
waving his smoking gun.
"Shore were a lot of 'ern,
wasn't there, Podner?• the cows
boy drawled.
Upsidedown to t''revent Peeking
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f urrER LUCK NEXT TIME -Freckl-
ed Robert Maslin, 12, was die-
qualified whenenter
a rued.
to
1 e t
his bullfrog in the butter churn-
ing contest at the third annual
Butter Day Celebration. Robsrt
wanted to drop the frog into the
bucket of cream and let the
croaker churn it by kicking
around. Might have worked,,
too, but the judges( thought the
boy should do the churning
himself.